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Kid Friendly Nutrition Activities for You and Your Family
These three fun activities will help add color and essential nutrients to your family's diet.
Creating a Color Chart
A color chart can be a great tool to use with children to evaluate and encourage
a variety of different colored fruits and vegetables in their diet.
Steps to Create a Color Chart:
Brewing up a Multi-Colored Power Potion - Fruit
Smoothie
Having the kids create a fruit smoothie with their choice of frozen fruits
and yogurt is a terrific way to boost their intake (and yours) of fabulous
vitamins, minerals, calcium and fiber. Simply have the kids pick out frozen
fruit from the grocer's freezer section, next have them select a yogurt.
Add 2 cups of fruit to 1 cup of yogurt (add water, low fat milk, soymilk,
or juice or to thin if necessary) and you'll have enough smoothies for
4 people to enjoy. Liz Ward, registered dietitian and author of The Complete
Idiot's Guide to Feeding Your Baby and Toddler recommends trying "banana
and peach smoothies. If you have a variety of fruit, kids can mix and match."
Fruit
of the Week Club!
Encourage your children to join you on a trip to the grocery store's produce
section. Have each child select one fruit they have never seen or eaten before.
I have enjoyed doing this activity with my own children, as we all have experienced
new fruits together for the first time. Locate recipes on the web or in a cookbook
that contain their newly "discovered" fruit. Learn where the fruit originated
and where it is grown. Children connect more with food when they learn more
about its origin.
These easy strategies may just be your child's ticket to better health. Enjoy adding a variety of produce to your diet. You and your children will reap the healthful rewards.
Have fun and teach kids good health in the Super Crew Kids Activities section!
Kate Scarlata, RD, LDN is a Registered Dietitian with a Bachelor in Science from Simmons College in Boston Massachusetts. Her formal training was completed at Brigham and Women's Hospital, a Harvard Medical School teaching affiliate. Kate currently has a private practice in Boston Massachusetts.